The world is changing fast. The unrest in the Middle East has reminded every nation of one hard truth: Energy security is national security.
Across the world, countries that depend heavily on imported fuel are under pressure. Prices are rising. Supply chains are uncertain. In some places fuel has become significantly more expensive. In others, availability itself has become a concern.
But Nigeria stands in a different position today. For the first time in many years, we can say something powerful: Nigeria does not have to panic.
Why? Because one Nigerian, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, took a risk many believed was impossible. He built a refinery in Nigeria, for Nigeria. He invested where others doubted.
He continued where many would have stopped. Today, while much of the world worries about fuel security, Nigeria has a strategic advantage.
We have crude oil. We have refining capacity. We have local production. We have the ability to protect our people from external shocks. This is bigger than business. This is national protection.
But there is something else Nigerians must understand.
Whenever a system changes, those who benefited from the old system rarely surrender quietly.
For decades, Nigeria’s fuel market depended heavily on imports, middlemen, offshore traders and foreign supply chains. Entire business models were built around bringing fuel into a country that already produces crude oil.
Now that reality is changing.
And because it is changing, Aliko Dangote will continue to face criticism, attacks and attempts to discredit his efforts.
That should not surprise anyone.
Every litre refined in Nigeria reduces dependence on imports. Every reduction in fuel costs removes pressure from Nigerian families. Every step toward self-sufficiency weakens the old order.
The truth is simple: Dangote is not the problem. Dangote is the target. Not because he is failing. But because he is succeeding.
Aliko Dangote has every commercial reason to follow international market trends and increase prices whenever global prices rise.
The easy option would be to say: The world market has gone up. Nigerians must pay more.”
But leadership is not always about doing what is easy. Sometimes leadership is about remembering the people who stood with you.
Ordinary Nigerians believed in this refinery. They defended it. They prayed for it. They waited for it.
They understood that a country producing crude oil while importing most of its fuel would never have a sustainable future.
Today, the refinery is beginning to answer that national challenge. And I believe Aliko Dangote understands that this moment is about more than profit.
It is about stability. It is about gratitude. It is about the country. It is about Africa.
There is an African proverb that says: Rain does not choose whose roof to fall on.”Fuel prices do not choose whose pocket to touch.
Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo, Ijaw, Tiv, Edo and Fulani — when we stand at the filling station, we are all watching the same numbers. Whether you drive a G-Wagon, a Danfo, a Keke or a Rolls-Royce, fuel affects us all. If local refining can keep prices stable or bring them lower, then the benefits must reach the people.
The transporter must feel it. The market woman must feel it. The farmer must feel it. The student must feel it. The small business owner must feel it. The family man must feel it.
That is the larger vision.
A Nigeria that does not simply export raw materials but processes them.A Nigeria that adds value.A Nigeria that creates jobs.A Nigeria that protects itself from global uncertainty.A Nigeria that builds industrial capacity for future generations.
Dangote Refinery is therefore not merely a refinery.
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It is a strategic national asset. It is an industrial shield. It is proof that Africans can build at a scale that changes the destiny of nations.
As Alhaji Aliko Dangote GCON continues his ambitious industrialisation agenda for Nigeria and Africa, he sends a powerful message: No foreign nation will build our economy for us.No foreign investor will love Nigeria more than Nigerians themselves.
The responsibility for building Africa belongs to Africans. The responsibility for creating prosperity belongs to us.
And the responsibility for supporting those who invest boldly in our future belongs to all of us. Nigeria has been given a rare opportunity. We must seize it. And where the benefits of local refining can be passed to the people, let them reach the people.
For Nigeria. From Nigeria. For Africa.
I congratulate all the good people of Nigeria for their understanding.
Dan D. Kunle writes from Abuja.


